Facebook Removed 3.2 Billion Fake Accounts in Q2, Q3 2019

Social media giant Facebook has released the fourth edition of its Community Standards Enforcement Report detailing the steps it has taken in the previous two quarters of the year to ensure content that violates its community standards doesn’t remain on the site.

In the report, the company highlights that itremoved a whopping 3.2 billion fake accounts in the last two quarters, i.e., from April to September this year. These accounts were caught before they were activated on Facebook, which is why they don’t reflect in the company’s reported user-figures. The company estimates thatabout 5% of its massive 2.45 billion user base is comprised of fake accounts.

The company has also, for the first time in its community standards report, included data from Instagram. The report mentions that the companyremoved over 4.5 million pieces of content relating to self-injury and suicidefrom Facebook. On Instagram, the company removed a total of 1.68 million pieces of content that encouraged self-injury or suicide.

Facebook alsoremoved 11.6 million pieces of content relating to child abuseand child pornography from its platform, up from 5.8 million in Q1 2019. The company also claims thatit was able to proactively discover and remove 99% of posts relating to child abuse and exploitation.On Instagram, the company removed 1.26 million pieces of content relating to child nudity and sexual violation of children.

Moreover, the company said that over the last two years it hasinvested in technologies that can proactively detect hate speech on its platform, allowing Facebook to remove such content without someone having to report it, and in many cases, says Facebook, before anyone even gets to see such content. To do this, Facebook is“identifying images and identical strings of text that have already been removed as hate speech, and machine-learning classifiers that look at things like language, as well as the reactions and comments to a post, to assess how closely it matches common phrases, patterns and attacks that we’ve seen previously in content that violates our policies against hate.”

Akshay Gangwar

Greetings, tech titans and fellow literary time-travelers! I’m Akshay, your tech-whisperer and Harry Potter’s number one stalker – seriously, don’t ask me how many times I’ve read those books; it’s borderline unhealthy.

Working in the tech journalism industry since 2016, I have 7 years of experience covering everything from technology news, to well-researched resource articles. Now the Content Strategist at Beebom, I often pen down op-eds for our website, sharing expert commentary on the latest in technology, AI, and electric cars.

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